Mercurial > emacs
changeset 52854:f6ac1fc587f8
(fringe-mode): Use active voice in docstring.
(set-fringe-style): Ditto.
author | Lute Kamstra <lute@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 14 Oct 2003 11:29:50 +0000 |
parents | 91a9da753e30 |
children | fd2f7022e7bd |
files | lisp/fringe.el |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/lisp/fringe.el Tue Oct 14 11:26:43 2003 +0000 +++ b/lisp/fringe.el Tue Oct 14 11:29:50 2003 +0000 @@ -139,21 +139,21 @@ ;;;###autoload (defun fringe-mode (&optional mode) - "Set default appearance of fringes on all frames. + "Set the default appearance of fringes on all frames. -When called interactively, the user is queried for MODE. Valid -values for MODE include `none', `default', `left-only', -`right-only', `minimal' and `half'. +When called interactively, query the user for MODE. Valid values +for MODE include `none', `default', `left-only', `right-only', +`minimal' and `half'. When used in a Lisp program, MODE can be a cons cell where the integer in car specifies the left fringe width and the integer in cdr specifies the right fringe width. MODE can also be a single integer that specifies both the left and the right fringe width. -When nil is used instead of an integer, that means to use the -default fringe width (8 pixels). These width specifications may -be rounded up to ensure that their sum is a multiple of the -character width of a frame. A fringe width of 0 is never rounded -up. +If a fringe width specification is nil, that means to use the +default width (8 pixels). This command may round up the left and +right width specifications to ensure that their sum is a multiple +of the character width of a frame. It never rounds up a fringe +width of 0. Fringe widths set by `set-window-fringes' override the default fringe widths set by this command. This command applies to all @@ -165,21 +165,21 @@ ;;;###autoload (defun set-fringe-style (&optional mode) - "Set default appearance of fringes on selected frame. + "Set the default appearance of fringes on the selected frame. -When called interactively, the user is queried for MODE. Valid -values for MODE include `none', `default', `left-only', -`right-only', `minimal' and `half'. +When called interactively, query the user for MODE. Valid values +for MODE include `none', `default', `left-only', `right-only', +`minimal' and `half'. When used in a Lisp program, MODE can be a cons cell where the integer in car specifies the left fringe width and the integer in cdr specifies the right fringe width. MODE can also be a single integer that specifies both the left and the right fringe width. -When nil is used instead of an integer, that means to use the -default fringe width (8 pixels). These width specifications may -be rounded up to ensure that their sum is a multiple of the -character width of the frame. A fringe width of 0 is never -rounded up. +If a fringe width specification is nil, that means to use the +default width (8 pixels). This command may round up the left and +right width specifications to ensure that their sum is a multiple +of the character width of a frame. It never rounds up a fringe +width of 0. Fringe widths set by `set-window-fringes' override the default fringe widths set by this command. If you want to set the